Abstract

A population panel of 90 aromatic short grain rice accessions were evaluated for 26 agro-morphological and quality traits using principal component analysis (PCA) and cluster analysis for the determination of genetic variation pattern, and identification of the major traits contributing to the diversity. First six principal components (PCs) exhibited Eigenvalue more than one with 74.4 per cent of total variability among the 26 characters. The PC1 showed 24.55% while, PC2, PC3, PC4, PC5 and PC6 exhibited 15.48 %, 11.48 %, 9.96 %, 7.89 % and 5.12 % variability, respectively among the accessions for the traits under study. The results of PCA suggested that characters such as effective tillers per plant, number of spikelets per panicle, number of filled spikelets per panicle, spikelet fertility %, milling %, head rice recovery %, kernel length and kernel length after cooking were the principal discriminatory characteristics of aromatic short grain accessions of rice. Seven divergent clusters were formed by UPGMA clustering method. The pattern of group constellation proved the existence of significant amount of variability. The intra cluster distance ranged from 0.00 (cluster VI) to 6.33 (cluster V). The inter cluster distance was maximum between cluster VI and VII (18.854) and minimum between cluster II and cluster IV (7.673). To realize much variability and high heterotic effect, parents should be selected from two clusters having wider inter-cluster distance. Considering the importance of genetic distance and relative contribution of characters towards total divergence, the present study indicated that parental lines selected from cluster VI (IGSR -3-1-5) for number of spikelets per panicle, number of filled spikelets per panicle, grain length, kernel length and length breadth ratio, and from cluster VII (Khasakani, Kolijoha) for effective tillers per plant, 1000 grain weight, grain yield per plant, harvest index, grain breadth, length breadth ratio after cooking and elongation index could be used in crossing programmes to achieve desired segregants.

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